Dow Jones InteractiveCan disgraced broker be Wall Street's white knight?  (A New Beginning, or Just Deja Vu?).(Ross Mandell seeks brokers for new firm, Sky  Capital Holdings)(Brief Article) 07/29/2002 Wall Street Letter 9 Copyright 2002 Gale Group Inc. All rights reserved. COPYRIGHT 2002 Euromoney  Institutional Investor PLC/Tel: +44(0)207-779-8999/www.wallstreetletter.com
  The CEO of Sky Capital Holdings, Ross Mandell, is offering something unusual on  Wall Street these days: job openings at a new, confident firm. But he himself is  having difficulties shrugging off a checkered past acquired in the hedonistic  1980s.  During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Mandell worked at Oppenheimer & Co. and  Prudential-Bache Securities as well as smaller now-defunct firms such as D.  Blech & Co. and Steve Andrew & Co., where he had a number of run-ins with the  National Association of Securities Dealers. According to the regulatory body,  Mandell has paid out over $100,000 for upwards of 10 arbitration settlements and  awards. The majority of these claims involve the mishandling of clients  accounts. The most substantial payment, a $75,000 settlement in 1997, was for  alleged "misrepresentation, unauthorized trading and unsuitable investments."  Also, there was a six-month suspension in 1995 imposed by the NASD for previous  allegations of churning. But that was then and this is now, says Mandell, who  explains that his conflicts came during a time when he was addicted to alcohol  and cocaine-the diet of choice for many brokers in that era. Since 1990 he has  been clean and sober, he said. 
  Now, Mandell is back and at the helm of a new enterprise, which he and his  associates see as an attractive alternative to the bloated dowagers of Wall  Street. The new full-service investment bank and brokerage firm, which is based  in London and New York, is going full steam ahead. With the management and  oversight now in place, the firm is going on an aggressive hiring spree. Michael  Recca, a former investment banker and the firm's new president, said Sky Capital  expects to hire 100 to 200 brokers over the next year. On the European front,  Recca said that an acquisition is likely, though the firm is also looking at  expansion through hiring. Already, the firm is talking with groups in Germany,  Switzerland and Italy.  "We are a more traditional, more personalized alternative to the major financial  institutions," Mandell Boasted over lunch at Sky Capitals' New York headquarters  at 110 Wall Street. He proposes that what investors want is a return to the  small, intimate firms of decades ago.  What Mandell and his associates are not suggesting is that anything needs to be  changed in the overall structure of financial services firms. On the subject of  compensation for brokers and analysts, for example, Mandell sees no need for  change. "I don't believe it is a compensation issue, it is a management issue,"  he said.  For Mandell and Recca, the culprits are the analysts and irresponsible CEOs who  went wild during the tech bubble. The fact that so many misdeeds are being  shaken out now is proof that the system does indeed work if given enough time to  right itself.  Critics Caution  But critics argue that it was exactly the same system that allowed Mandell and  his colleagues, many of whose suspect behavior never reached arbitration courts,  to make out like bandits in the bad old days of the 1980s. They point out that,  given the black marks on Mandell's NASD record, he would be unlikely to find a  firm willing to hire him. This is especially troubling since the prospectus for  Sky Capital's IPO stares that: "The continued involvement of Ross Mandell is of  key importance to the development and growth of the Company's activities. The  absence of Ross Mandell would adversely affect the Company's ability to  implement its business plan."  Mandell is proud of the turnaround he has made in his life, and believes that  through paying his settlements and awards he has demonstrated his willingness to  make amends. A compliance officer reporting directly to the president will  supervise all of the firm's brokers, including Mandell. Yet, for investors, it  remains essentially an act of faith that Mandell will not fall off the wagon or  that other brokers at the firm won't fall prey to temptations when times are  good again-or that if they do, their actions will be quickly detected.  Such criticism has not been a deterrent to investors. On July 17, the very day  that Robertson Stephenson closed its doors, Sky Capital Holdings started trading  on the London Stock Exchange, ending the day up 21%. Even in the current soft  market, it has been trading well ever since.  "It is precisely because firms like Robertson Stephens are gone that there is an  opportunity for us," said Recca. Sky Capital is betting on the fact that people  have become disillusioned with the large Wall Street players and are eager to  embrace a fresh new face. In particular, Mandell said the firm believes that  major institutions might be more willing to divorce themselves from long  standing brokerage relationships.  As others buckle under the onslaught of bad news from the markets, Recca and  Mandell can hardly contain their glee. "I was outside my house the other day and  one of my neighbors asked me why I was looking so cheerful. He asked, 'Aren't  you on Wall Street?"' Mandell chuckled. It remains to be seen if Sky Capital can  offer a solution to Wall Street's woes or if it is just another Street  opportunist doomed to be stymied by the rampant suspicion now pervading the  investment community.
  Copyright © 2000 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |